853 research outputs found
Access to recorded interviews: A research agenda
Recorded interviews form a rich basis for scholarly inquiry. Examples include oral histories, community memory projects, and interviews conducted for broadcast media. Emerging technologies offer the potential to radically transform the way in which recorded interviews are made accessible, but this vision will demand substantial investments from a broad range of research communities. This article reviews the present state of practice for making recorded interviews available and the state-of-the-art for key component technologies. A large number of important research issues are identified, and from that set of issues, a coherent research agenda is proposed
Seeing What You're Told: Sentence-Guided Activity Recognition In Video
We present a system that demonstrates how the compositional structure of
events, in concert with the compositional structure of language, can interplay
with the underlying focusing mechanisms in video action recognition, thereby
providing a medium, not only for top-down and bottom-up integration, but also
for multi-modal integration between vision and language. We show how the roles
played by participants (nouns), their characteristics (adjectives), the actions
performed (verbs), the manner of such actions (adverbs), and changing spatial
relations between participants (prepositions) in the form of whole sentential
descriptions mediated by a grammar, guides the activity-recognition process.
Further, the utility and expressiveness of our framework is demonstrated by
performing three separate tasks in the domain of multi-activity videos:
sentence-guided focus of attention, generation of sentential descriptions of
video, and query-based video search, simply by leveraging the framework in
different manners.Comment: To appear in CVPR 201
The CUBIST Project: Combining and Uniting Business Intelligence with Semantic Technologies
As a preface to this Special 'CUBIST' Edition of the International Journal of Intelligent Information Technologies IJIIT, this article describes the European Framework Seven Combining and Unifying Business Intelligence with Semantic Technologies CUBIST project, which ran from October 2010 to September 2013. The project aimed to combine the best elements of traditional BI with the newer, semantic, technologies of the Sematic Web, in the form of the Resource Description Framework RDF, and Formal Concept Analysis FCA. CUBIST's purpose was to provide end-users with "conceptually relevant and user friendly visual analytics" to allow them to explore their data in new ways, discovering hidden meaning and solving hitherto difficult problems. To this end, three of the partners in CUBIST were use-cases: recruitment consultancy, computational biology and the space industry. Each use-case provided their own requirements and problems that were finally addressed by the prototype CUBIST visual-analytics developed in the project
- âŚ